Dear Archbishop Tempesta, brother Bishops, Distinguished Authorities, Members of the Venerable Third Order of Saint Francis of Penance, Doctors, Nurses, and Health Care Workers, Dear Young People and Family Members,
God has
willed that my journey, after the Shrine of Our Lady of Aparecida,
should take me to a particular shrine of human suffering – the Saint
Francis of Assisi Hospital. The conversion of your patron saint is well
known: the young Francis abandoned the riches and comfort of the world
in order to become a poor man among the poor. He understood that true
joy and riches do not come from the idols of this world – material
things and the possession of them – but are to be found only in
following Christ and serving others. Less well known, perhaps, is the
moment when this understanding took concrete form in his own life. It
was when Francis embraced a leper. This brother, suffering and an
outcast, was the “mediator of light ... for Saint Francis of Assisi”
(Lumen Fidei, 57), because in every suffering brother and sister that we
embrace, we embrace the suffering Body of Christ. Today, in this place
where people struggle with drug addiction, I wish to embrace each and
every one of you, who are the flesh of Christ, and to ask God to renew
your journey, and also mine, with purpose and steadfast hope.
To embrace –
we all have to learn to embrace the one in need, as Saint Francis did.
There are so many situations in Brazil, and throughout the world, that
require attention, care and love, like the fight against chemical
dependency. Often, instead, it is selfishness that prevails in our
society. How many “dealers of death” there are that follow the logic of
power and money at any cost! The scourge of drug-trafficking, that
favours violence and sows the seeds of suffering and death, requires of
society as a whole an act of courage. A reduction in the spread and
influence of drug addiction will not be achieved by a liberalization of
drug use, as is currently being proposed in various parts of Latin
America. Rather, it is necessary to confront the problems underlying the
use of these drugs, by promoting greater justice, educating young
people in the values that build up life in society, accompanying those
in difficulty and giving them hope for the future. We all need to look
upon one another with the loving eyes of Christ, and to learn to embrace
those in need, in order to show our closeness, affection and love.
To embrace
someone is not enough, however. We must hold the hand of the one in
need, of the one who has fallen into the darkness of dependency perhaps
without even knowing how, and we must say to him or her: You can get up,
you can stand up. It is difficult, but it is possible if you want to.
Dear friends, I wish to say to each of you, but especially to all those
others who have not had the courage to embark on our journey: You have
to want to stand up; this is the indispensible condition! You will find
an outstretched hand ready to help you, but no one is able to stand up
in your place. But you are never alone! The Church and so many people
are close to you. Look ahead with confidence. Yours is a long and
difficult journey, but look ahead, there is “a sure future, set against a
different horizon with regard to the illusory enticements of the idols
of this world, yet granting new momentum and strength to our daily
lives” (Lumen Fidei, 57). To all of you, I repeat: Do not let yourselves
be robbed of hope! And not only that, but I say to us all: let us not
rob others of hope, let us become bearers of hope!
In the
Gospel, we read the parable of the Good Samaritan, that speaks of a man
assaulted by robbers and left half dead at the side of the road. People
pass by him and look at him. But they do not stop, they just continue on
their journey, indifferent to him: it is none of their business! Only a
Samaritan, a stranger, sees him, stops, lifts him up, takes him by the
hand, and cares for him (cf. Lk 10:29-35). Dear friends, I believe that
here, in this hospital, the parable of the Good Samaritan is made
tangible. Here there is no indifference, but concern. There is no
apathy, but love. The Saint Francis Association and the Network for the
Treatment of Drug Addiction show how to reach out to those in difficulty
because in them we see the face of Christ, because in these persons,
the flesh of Christ suffers. Thanks are due to all the medical
professionals and their associates who work here. Your service is
precious; undertake it always with love. It is a service given to Christ
present in our brothers and sisters. As Jesus says to us: “As you did
it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me” (Mt
25:40).
And I wish
to repeat to all of you who struggle against drug addiction, and to
those family members who share in your difficulties: the Church is not
distant from your troubles, but accompanies you with affection. The Lord
is near you and he takes you by the hand. Look to him in your most
difficult moments and he will give you consolation and hope. And trust
in the maternal love of his Mother Mary. This morning, in the Shrine of
Aparecida, I entrusted each of you to her heart. Where there is a cross
to carry, she, our Mother, is always there with us. I leave you in her
hands, while with great affection I bless all of you.